Filed 4/23/19
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
SSL LANDLORD, LLC, et al.,
Plaintiffs and Appellants,
A151318
v.
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, (San Mateo County
Super. Ct. No. CIV532369)
Defendant and Respondent.
Plaintiffs SSL Landlord, LLC, SSL Tenant, LLC, and Health Care Reit, Inc.
(hereinafter collectively referred to as “Silverado”) appeal from a post judgment order
denying a motion for attorney fees under Revenue and Taxation Code sections 1611.6
and 5152.1 We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The order denying Silverado’s request for attorney fees relates to its tax refund
lawsuit which is the subject of an appeal resolved in a separate opinion. (See SSL
Landlord, LLC v. County of San Mateo (April 23, 2019, A150878) [nonpub. opn.].) We
set forth only those facts that are necessary to resolve this appeal.
Silverado purchased an assisted living and memory care facility, known as the
Silverado Senior Living Belmont Hills (property). The San Mateo County Assessor
(Assessor) assessed the property’s fair market value for property tax purposes at $26.4
million for the October 14, 2011 base year value assessment and the 2012/2013 regular
assessment.
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All further unspecified statutory references are to the Revenue and Taxation Code.
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Silverado filed administrative appeals, seeking a refund of paid property taxes
based on a challenge to the Assessor’s valuation. Following a three-day hearing, the San
Mateo County Assessment Appeals Board (Board) issued a 22-page decision in which it
concluded the assessment value of $26.4 million was indicative of the fair market value
of the subject property “based on the record in this matter.” The Board specifically found
that the income approach analysis was the appropriate method for determining the fair
market value of the subject property. “Using the income approach, an appraiser estimates
‘the future income stream a prospective purchaser could expect to receive from the
enterprise and then discounts that amount to a present value by use of a capitalization
rate.’ [Citations.] In other words, the fair market value of an income producing property
is estimated as the present value of the property’s expected future income stream.” (Elk
Hills Power, LLC v. Board of Equalization (2013) 57 Cal.4th 593, 604–605 (Elk Hills
Power).)
The Assessor testified before the Board regarding his application of the income
approach to determine the fair market value of the subject property. He explained that he
calculated a stabilized income stream for the facility on the property and deducted from
that amount fixed charges, reserves, and a base management fee of five percent. The
Assessor then applied a capitalization rate of 7.75% and deducted an amount for the
potential loss of income, arriving at the rounded market value of $26.4 million. The
Assessor “assum[ed] the presence of intangible assets . . . necessary to put the taxable
property to beneficial or productive use” (§ 110, subd. (e)) and accounted for the
presence of intangible assets subsumed in the facility’s projected income stream by the
deduction of the base management fee of five percent. Silverado took the position that
the Assessor’s deductions were not sufficient and he should have made additional
deductions to the projected income stream to account for the values of the intangible
assets. In response to Silverado’s contention, and after in camera receipt of Silverado’s
tax documents during the administrative hearings, the Assessor prepared for the Board a
revised income approach analysis (in the form of a spreadsheet exhibit) in which he made
additional deductions for the values of those intangible assets that Silverado claimed had
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been impermissibly subsumed in the assessment value. However, Silverado objected to
the admission of the Assessor’s revised analysis because Silverado was not presenting
“an intangibles case” and therefore, it would not be producing evidence of quantified
values of the intangible assets. At Silverado’s request, the Board did not consider the
Assessor’s revised analysis, which supported a downward adjustment to the assessment
value, and instead considered only the Assessor’s original analysis underpinning the
$26.4 million valuation and Silverado’s challenge to that analysis.
Based on consideration of the evidence and testimony admitted at the
administrative hearings, the Board found that the Assessor’s methodology had
appropriately accounted for the values of all intangible assets to be deducted from the
facility’s projected income stream prior to taxation. In so concluding, the Board
emphasized that the Assessor had attempted to remove any value attributable to the
intangible assets by deducting a base management fee and that Silverado had set forth no
credible evidence of quantified values of any intangible assets that it alleged were
subsumed in the Assessor’s income approach analysis. Therefore, in the absence of any
evidence of the quantified values of any identified intangible assets, the Board found the
Assessor’s methodology had appropriately accounted for the value of the business
enterprise.
A bench trial was held on Silverado’s complaint, after which the trial court issued
a 17-page statement of decision finding in favor of both Silverado and the County of San
Mateo (County). The court found, in pertinent part, that the Board appropriately used an
income approach analysis to determine the fair market value of the subject property as
proposed by the Assessor. However, the court agreed with Silverado that the income
approach analysis used by the Assessor did not adequately make “all necessary
deductions” to remove the value of intangible assets that Silverado claimed had been
impermissibly subsumed in the assessment value. In ordering the Board to issue a new
decision, the court indicated the remand hearing was for the “narrow purpose” of
allowing the Board to clarify its valuation using an income approach analysis and based
on the evidence that had been admitted at the administrative hearings. The court also
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noted that the Board could allow the parties to submit additional evidence limited to
assisting the Board in making its new determination of the valuation using an income
approach analysis, and, if necessary, determinations of quantified values of those
intangible assets that Silverado claimed had been impermissibly subsumed in the
assessment value.
Following the issuance of the trial court’s decision on the merits, Silverado filed a
motion for an award of attorney fees under sections 1611.6 and 5152, which the County
opposed. The court ruled that none of the statutory bases for the award of attorney fees
applied in this case. In its written order, the court stated section 5152 was not applicable
(without further comment) and section 1611.6 did not apply because “the Board’s
findings ‘include[d] all legally relevant sub-conclusions supportive of its ultimate
decision’ such that [the court] is ‘able to trace and adequately examine the Board’s mode
of analysis.’ [(] Farr v. County of Nevada (2010) 187 Cal.App.4th 669, 686.[)]”
Silverado’s timely appeal ensued.
DISCUSSION
Silverado challenges the trial court’s denial of its request for attorney fees on
various grounds, all of which are unavailing.
I. Standard of Review
Our standard of review is well settled. “ ‘A request for an award of attorney fees
is entrusted to the trial court’s discretion and will not be overturned in the absence of a
manifest abuse of discretion, a prejudicial error of law, or necessary findings not
supported by substantial evidence.’ [Citations.] Because the primary issue before us
concerns legal entitlement to fees based upon statutory interpretation, our review is de
novo. [Citation.] The court’s factual findings, however, are subject to the substantial
evidence standard of review. [Citation.]” (Land Partners, LLC v. County of Orange
(2018) 19 Cal.App.5th 741, 745 (Land Partners).)
II. Attorney Fees Under Section 1611.6
Silverado argues the trial court erred in denying its request for attorney fees under
section 1611.6 because the Board did not make compliant findings under section 1611.5
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and the Board’s findings were so deficient as to require remand to secure compliance
with section 1611.5. We disagree.
Revenue and Taxation Code section 1611.6 provides, in relevant part: “If the
county board fails to make findings upon request, or if findings made are found by a
reviewing court to be so deficient that a remand to the county board is ordered to secure
reasonable compliance with the elements of findings required by Section 1611.5, the
action of the county board shall be deemed to be arbitrary and capricious within the
meaning of Section 800 of the Government Code, so as to support an allowance of
reasonable attorney’s fees against the county for the services necessary to obtain proper
findings.” The referenced Revenue and Taxation Code section 1611.5 provides, in
pertinent part, that the Board’s “written findings of fact shall fairly disclose the board’s
determination of all material points raised by the party in his or her petition and at the
hearing, including a statement of the method or methods of valuation used in appraising
the property.” The referenced Government Code Section 800 reads: “(a) In any civil
action to appeal or review of the award, finding, or other determination of any
administrative proceeding under this code or any other provision of state law . . ., if it is
shown that the award, finding, or other determination of the proceeding was the result of
arbitrary or capricious action or conduct by a public entity or an officer thereof in his or
her official capacity, the complainant if he or she prevails in the civil action may collect
from the public entity reasonable attorney’s fees . . . .”
Silverado contends the trial court’s remand order reflects that the Board did not
address “the material points raised based on the evidence presented by [Silverado]” and
did not include “all of the legally relevant sub-conclusions supportive of its ultimate
decision.” On that basis, Silverado argues the Board’s findings “were so deficient as to
require remand to secure compliance with Section 1611.5.” In its reply brief, Silverado
further argues that (1) the trial court erred by not ruling that the Board’s findings were
deficient, but this court can make that finding; (2) the trial court’s use of the word
“ ‘narrow’ ” to describe the purpose of the remand did not make the Board’s findings
“ ‘sufficient’ ”; (3) substantive deficiencies in the Board’s findings were not cured simply
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because the findings were understandable; (4) the trial court was not required to explicitly
find the Board’s findings were “ ‘arbitrary and capricious’ ” to support a fee award
because the statute establishes the requisite standard; and (5) the deficiencies in the
Board’s findings were not caused by Silverado’s “ ‘invited error.’ ” Silverado’s
contentions are unavailing.
In addressing the Board’s compliance with the fact-finding requirements of section
1611.5, it is self-evident that the Board fully met the statute’s requirements that it “fairly
disclose” its decisions of all “material points” raised by Silverado in the petition and at
the administrative hearings, “including a statement of the method or methods of valuation
used in appraising the property.” (§ 1611.5.) The Board issued a 22-page decision in
which it set forth the applicable law and the parties’ burdens of proof, found the record
supported the use of an income approach analysis in determining fair market value, and
gave detailed reasons for accepting the Assessor’s valuation evidence and rejecting
Silverado’s valuation evidence and challenges to the Assessor’s valuation evidence.
Additionally, the Board’s written findings of fact were in harmony with case law
interpreting section 1611.5. As explained in Farr v. County of Nevada, supra, 187
Cal.App.4th at p. 686, the Board’s findings of fact under section 1611.5 “should include
all legally relevant subconclusions supportive of its ultimate decision so that a reviewing
court is able to trace and adequately examine the Board’s mode of analysis,” and “shall
address specifically its reasoning for accepting or rejecting each issue raised by the
parties.” Thus, even if the Board’s decision in this case did not “cover every evidentiary
matter,” the Board’s findings did “ ‘enable the reviewing court to trace and examine the
agency’s mode of analysis.’ ” (Midstate Theatres, Inc. v. County of Stanislaus (1976) 55
Cal.App.3d 864, 888 [appellate court found tax board’s findings complied with section
1611.5 even though findings did not cover every evidentiary matter pressed by
applicant].)
Additionally, as we have held, an “ ‘ “award of attorney’s fees under Government
Code section 800 is allowed only if the actions of a public entity or official were wholly
arbitrary or capricious. The phrase ‘arbitrary or capricious’ encompasses conduct not
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supported by a fair or substantial reason, a stubborn insistence on following unauthorized
conduct, or a bad faith legal dispute.” [Citations.] Attorney’s fees may not be awarded
simply because the administrative entity or official’s action was erroneous, even if it was
“clearly erroneous.” ’ ” (American President Lines, Ltd. v. Zolin (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th
910, 934, quoting Stirling v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d
1305, 1312.)
In resolving Silverado’s complaint for a tax refund based on an excessive
assessment value, the trial court found the Board had the option of valuing the property
by applying an income approach that used either the actual operating income of the
facility on the subject property (the Assessor’s method) or comparable rents of other
properties (the method used by Silverado’s expert appraiser). According to Silverado, the
use of comparable rents of other properties “assures that no intangible value is included
in the assessment” value. However, because Silverado’s expert appraiser’s “comparable”
rental properties were not actually comparable, the court found the Board had
appropriately relied on the actual operating income of the facility on the subject property.
Nonetheless, the trial court agreed with Silverado that the Board’s use of the actual
operating income of the facility on the subject property did not make “all necessary
deductions” to remove the value of intangible assets that Silverado claimed had been
impermissibly subsumed in the assessment value. In ordering a remand for a new
determination, the court allowed Silverado a second opportunity to present additional
data of comparable rents of other properties in support of the income approach used by its
expert appraiser. If the Board were again to decide to apply an income approach using
the actual operating income from the facility on the subject property, then the Board was
directed to quantitively value any intangible assets, and, if appropriate, deduct the values
of the intangible assets from the projected income stream prior to taxation. While the
trial court remanded for a new determination, we concur with its explicit finding that the
Board’s failure to make all necessary valuations and deductions for intangible assets was
an “invited error” caused, in significant part, by Silverado’s objection that prohibited the
admission of the Assessor’s evidence of quantified values of the intangible assets that
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Silverado claimed had been impermissibly subsumed in the assessment value.
Because the Board’s resolution of Silverado’s assessment appeals was neither
arbitrary nor capricious, nor caused by a legal position taken in bad faith, no award of
attorney fees is warranted under section 1611.6.
III. Attorney Fees Under Section 5152
Silverado also contends attorney fees should be awarded under section 5152
because the Assessor intentionally ignored or rejected governing case law without first
seeking declaratory relief under section 538. We again disagree.
Section 5152 reads as follows: “In an action in which the recovery of taxes is
allowed by the court, if the court finds that the void assessment or void portion of the
assessment was made in violation of a specific provision of the Constitution of the State
of California, of this division, or of a rule or regulation of the board, and the assessor
should have followed the procedures set forth in Section 538 in lieu of making the
assessment, the plaintiff shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees as costs in addition
to the other allowable costs. This section is ancillary only, and shall not be construed to
create a new cause of action nor to be in lieu of any other provision of law.” The
referenced Section 538 reads, in pertinent part: “(a) If the assessor believes that a specific
provision of the Constitution of the State of California, of this division, or of a rule or
regulation of the board is unconstitutional or invalid, and as a result thereof concludes
that property should be assessed in a manner contrary to such provision, or the assessor
proposes to adopt general interpretation of a specific provision of the Constitution of the
State of California, of this division, or of a rule or regulation of the board, that would
result in a denial to five or more assesses in that county of an exemption, in whole or in
part, of their property from property taxation, the assessor shall, in lieu of making such an
assessment, bring an action for declaratory relief against the board under Section 1060 of
the Code of Civil Procedure [declaratory relief]. . . .”
“[T]here are three prerequisites to obtaining attorney fees under section 5152 in a
taxpayer refund action. First, the court must have allowed recovery of taxes. (§ 5152.)
Second, the court must have found the void assessment, or portion thereof, was made in
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violation of a specific provision of the state constitution, the property tax statutes, or a
Board of Equalization rule or regulation. (Ibid.) Third, the court must find the assessor
subjectively believed a specific provision of the state constitution, the property tax
statutes, or a Board of Equalization rule or regulation was unconstitutional or invalid, and
assessed property contrary thereto, but the assessor failed to bring the requisite
declaratory relief action. [Citation.] ‘By its own terms, section 5152 only applies where
the assessor should have utilized the procedures set forth under section 538.’ [¶] As for
the last of these three elements, the subjective belief of the assessor may be demonstrated
through statements made by the assessor or objective facts which evidence the assessor’s
subjective state of mind. Care must be taken to distinguish between a situation in which
an assessor believes a provision to be unconstitutional or invalid, and a situation in which
an assessor misinterprets or misapplies a provision. The former would implicate section
5152, whereas the latter would not.” (Land Partners, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 746;
see Ocean Avenue LLC v. County of Los Angeles (2014) 227 Cal.App.4th 344, 354
[section 5152 requires trial court to make factual finding that a flawed assessment was
based on the Assessor’s belief that a tax law was unconstitutional, rather than a
misunderstanding of the law]; Phillips Petroleum Co. v. County of Lake (1993) 15
Cal.App.4th 180, 197–198 [“[s]ections 5152 and 538 require a cognitive decision on the
part of the assessor that a particular provision, rule or regulation is unconstitutional or
invalid either on its face or as applied to the circumstances of the case”].)
We initially note that neither party addresses whether or not the first prerequisite
to an award of attorney fees under 5152 has been met. As noted, an award of attorney
fees is only authorized in an action in which the court “must have allowed the recovery of
taxes.” (§ 5152.) Here, the court has not as yet allowed the recovery of taxes. It has
remanded the matter to the Board for further proceedings to clarify its findings on the
existing administrative record, and, if appropriate, to allow the parties to present
additional evidence on the valuation of the property using an income approach analysis.
Moreover, we see nothing in the record that supports Silverado’s position that the
Assessor “disregarded and sought to circumvent positive law and the judicial decisions
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construing that law” regarding the valuation of intangible assets. The Assessor did not
challenge any law or rule governing the valuation of intangible assets. Nor did the
Assessor ever claim that the quantified values of nontaxable intangible assets should not
be excluded from the assessment value, and he did not refuse to deduct any quantified
values of intangible assets that were impermissibly subsumed in the assessment value.
Instead, the Assessor took the appropriate position that an income approach analysis
required him to consider and remove any quantifiable values of identified intangible
assets from the projected income stream prior to taxation, and he had attempted to
remove those values in performing his original analysis. To the extent Silverado claims
the Assessor’s income approach analysis fails to remove all quantified values for
identified intangible assets, the Assessor properly took the position that his original
analysis was based on the information given to him by Silverado, and that it was
Silverado’s burden to produce credible evidence that the fair market value of any
intangible assets had been impermissibly subsumed in the valuation. (Elk Hills Power,
supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 615.) Thus, when Silverado produced its income tax returns, the
Assessor prepared a revised income approach analysis, recalculated quantified values of
identified intangible assets, and removed those amounts from the facility’s projected
income stream, which resulted in a downward adjustment to the assessment value.
However, Silverado objected to the Board’s consideration of the Assessor’s proffered
evidence supporting his revised analysis and, consequently, the Board properly found that
Silverado had failed to meet its burden of producing credible evidence of the quantified
values of identified intangible assets that were impermissibly subsumed in the assessment
value.
In conclusion, the trial court made no finding, and we see no basis to make a
finding, that the Assessor’s position was based on a belief that a tax law or regulation was
unconstitutional or invalid either on its face or as applied in this case. Unlike the factual
circumstance in Ocean Avenue LLC v. County of Los Angeles, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th
344, we are not here concerned with an assessor who “ ‘advanced the Constitution’ ” and
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urged both the Board and the trial court not to apply a statutory law “ ‘because the
scenario [the law] protects . . . is “too good to be true.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 349.)
Accordingly, Silverado is not entitled to an award of attorneys under section 5152.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons we have stated, we uphold the trial court’s order. Silverado has
failed to demonstrate the court either made a prejudicial error of law, or abused its
discretion, in denying the request for attorney fees under sections 1611.6 and 5152.
DISPOSITION
The order, filed May 9, 2017, is affirmed. Defendant County of San Mateo is
awarded costs on appeal.
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_________________________
Petrou, J.
WE CONCUR:
_________________________
Siggins, P.J.
_________________________
Wiseman, J.*
SSL Landlord, LLC v. County of San Mateo/151318
Trial Court: San Mateo County Superior Court
*
Retired Associate Judge of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate District, assigned by
the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
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Trial Judge: Barbara J. Mallach
Counsel: Greenberg Traurig, C. Stephen Davis and Andrew W. Bodeau, for Plaintiffs
and Appellants.
Rebecca M. Archer and Kristina M. Paszek, Deputy County Counsel, for
Defendant and Respondent.
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